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Archived articles

Alumni

Embedded with their alma mater
Published Spring 2022
"We created the Presidential Management Fellows program to allow recent graduates to deepen their connection to the university and to the city of Baltimore while learning how decisions at complex institutions like ours are made," JHU President Ron Daniels says. / Johns Hopkins Magazine
Offline connections
Published Spring 2022
Johns Hopkins University alumni are once again networking and socializing face to face, thanks to some creative event planning by the Alumni Association / Johns Hopkins Magazine
A fridge full of love
Published Spring 2022
The Baltimore Community Fridge was started in fall 2020 as a simple way to move food and other goods from the hands of those who have a little extra directly to neighbors and community members / Johns Hopkins Magazine
Good morning, Baltimore
Published Spring 2022
Sarah Y. Kim explains how she found her voice working as journalist in Baltimore / Johns Hopkins Magazine
Chasing space
Published Feb 2, 2022
Whiting School alum and former APL employee Andre Douglas is one of 10 astronaut candidates who recently began training with NASA, the culmination of a life spent dreaming of the stars
Friends for Life
Making up for lost time
Published Winter 2021
After serving in WWII, Paul Hessemer and Bud Holecheck became friends as Homewood undergrads. Recently the two members of the Class of 1949 reunited for the first time in more than 70 years to catch up and discuss their shared wartime history. / Johns Hopkins Magazine
Giving
A nod to a mentor
Published Winter 2021
To celebrate the founding faculty of the Department of Computer Science and the lessons they taught him, Charlie Neuhauser established the Neuhauser Family Teaching Award / Johns Hopkins Magazine
Notebook
Lifelong learning worlds collide
Published Winter 2021
From a study of climate change through the archaeological remains of the great civilizations of the Americas to a 10-session novel-writing tutorial, the eclectic Odyssey program has something for every curious mind / Johns Hopkins Magazine